“It’s so important we recognize those who defended our democratic republic on that day,” he said, and that “people know we came back, as senators and House members, and finished our work that day, for the peaceful transfer of power.”

#January6th #jan6
#jan6th
#riotJanuary6th
#trump

https://apnews.com/article/jan-6-plaque-capitol-riot-house-senate-trump-edf51275515a7371149f2079f83834a4

Missing Jan. 6 plaque will now be displayed at the Capitol

The Senate has agreed to display a plaque honoring the police who defended the Capitol during the Jan. 6, 2021 attack. The action rebuffs House Speaker Mike Johnson, who has said the commemorative memorial does not comply with the law. The resolution says the plaque will be displayed in the Senate wing until it can be placed in its permanent location. Republican Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina announced during this week’s fifth anniversary of the Capitol siege that he would seek to ensure the plaque was installed and partnered with Democratic Sen. Jeff Merkley of Oregon. Senators said police must be honored for defending democracy.

AP News

“Not a peaceful protest”: Part 2 of 2 : Trump’s Terms – NPR

Jon Cherry / Getty Images / Photo illustration by Connie Hanzhang Jin / NPR

Trump’s Terms

“Not a peaceful protest”: Part 2 of 2

December 30, 2025, 11:00 AM ET 42-Minute Listen Transcript

Jon Cherry / Getty Images / Photo illustration by Connie Hanzhang Jin / NPR

In this NPR investigation, we look at how President Trump and his allies are rewriting history related to the Jan. 6, 2021 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol.

You can find the first part of “Not a Peaceful Protest” here. Support NPR and hear every episode of Trump’s Terms sponsor-free with NPR+. Sign up at plus.npr.org.

Editor’s Note: You can find my post of Part 1 here.

Continue/Read Original Article Here: “Not a peaceful protest”: Part 2 of 2 : Trump’s Terms : NPR

#Database #January6 #January62021 #January62026 #January6AttackOnUSCapitol #NationalPublicRadio #NotAPeacefulProtest #NPR #Part2Of2Parts #RiotJanuary6th #RiotersAssaultedCapitol #Trump #TrumpPardonsRioters

“Not a peaceful protest”: Part 1 of 2 : Trump’s Terms – NPR

Trump’s Terms

“Not a peaceful protest”: Part 1 of 2

December 29, 2025,11:00 AM ET 43-Minute Listen Transcript

Dept. of Justice and Getty Images/Collage by Connie Hanzhang Jin / NPR

In this NPR investigation, we look at how President Trump and his allies are rewriting history related to the Jan. 6, 2021 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol.

You can find the second part of “Not a Peaceful Protest” here. Support NPR and hear every episode of Trump’s Terms sponsor-free with NPR+. Sign up at plus.npr.org.

Continue/Read Original Article Here: “Not a peaceful protest”: Part 1 of 2 : Trump’s Terms : NPR

#2025 #Database #January6 #January62021 #NationalPublicRadio #NotAPeacefulProtest #NPR #Part1Of2Parts #RiotJanuary6th #RiotersAssaultedCapitol #TrumpPardonsRioters

Seeing Things – January 6th Is Still Happening In Real Time – Liza Donnelly

I’m serious today because this is deadly serious, January 6th Is Still Happening In Real Time

By Liza Donnelly, Jan 06, 2026

Above is drawing I did as I watched the insurrection unfold on television on January 6th, 2020. It was terrifying.

Later that day, during a live broadcast, I did the above on paper, from memory, live on Instagram. Police officer Eugene Goodman was the man who stopped insurrectionists from further entering the depths of the Capital; I remember watching him, in awe, and was so moved by his bravery. He may have single handedly saved the lives of some Senators, Congress people and Vice President Mike Pence.

For some years after that horrific violent coup attempt, we were hopeful that it was an isolated event. But as I began to see how Trump continue his election-denying, and more and more people were willing to lie about it and join his side, it was clear to me that we were in big trouble. I saw that what was going to happen was that Trump and anyone who attached themselves to him with these lies, was going to try to affect a coup from within the government. Then he was re-elected on more lies, swindling his followers into thinking he was all for them.

We are living a slow, internal coup right now. Vote in ALL elections, protest and call your reps.

The Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado has vowed to return to the country as soon as possible and she rejected the authority of the interim president backed by the US after it forcibly removed Maduro. She wants to return and hold elections.

Many people in Venezuela expected her to return as the leader of the country after Maduro was captured. Today, Machado publicly praised Trump for capturing Maduro, who was an illegitimate leader of the country following the previous elections which he lost. But Trump sidelined Machado as a potential leader, saying she has no support in her country; a flat out lie. She is hugely popular. Some are suggesting that because Machado was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize last year (for her opposition work against Maduro), and Trump desperately wanted to get it, that his ego will not let her return to the country. Trump wants to run Venezuela, and hopes to threaten those in power now to do what he wants. He probably thinks that Machado is not someone he can trust to do his bidding.

There was a briefing yesterday for the Congressional Gang of Four about the Venezuela military action. It left members with more questions, and we don’t know yet what those opposed to Trump’s warmongering will do.

“This business of coming over and just talking to some of us, I think is a special kind of stupid,” Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.) said in an interview Monday. “They need to sit down with every member of the Senate and explain what’s going on.”

As that briefing was going on, Trump advisor Stephen Miller was on CNN in an interview was at times very contentious, Miller yelling at Tapper, and saying some outrageous things. The premise of his comments were that the United States has the right, because of the fact that we are a superpower, to take over countries in the Western Hemisphere for our security. Power over diplomacy.

Below is a clip that will show you, as well as the full exchange. Miller stated that we have “a right to Greenland.” Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen of Denmark urged Mr. Trump on Sunday to “stop the threats” to annex Greenland, in effect attacking a NATO ally.

Miller:

“We live in a world, in the real world, Jake, that is governed by strength, that is governed by force, that is governed by power. These are the iron laws of the world since the beginning of time.”

“We set the terms and conditions,” Mr. Miller said. “We have a complete embargo on all of their oil and their ability to do commerce. So for them to do commerce, they need our permission. For them to be able to run an economy, they need our permission. So the United States is in charge. The United States is running the country.”

“The future of the free world depends on America being able to assert ourselves and our interests without apology. This whole period that happened after World War II when the United States began apologizing, groveling and begging…” then Jake Tapper cut him off saying “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”

“You’re looking at it the wrong way Jake. This neoliberalism idea that the United states should go around the world demanding elections everywhere!”

This is imperialism.

https://www.tiktok.com/@cnn/video/7592063639100624141?is_from_webapp=1&sender_device=pc

Here’s the whole interview:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kLFkQbPWWDI

Source: https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/embed/kLFkQbPWWDI?rel=0&autoplay=0&showinfo=0&enablejsapi=0

The Pentagon moved to punish retired Navy captain and Senator Mark Kelly for an “anti-Trump video” he was a part of (it was not anti-Trump), calling it “seditious behavior.” They want to cut his military pay of $6000/month.

“Pete Hegseth wants to send the message to every single retired servicemember that if they say something he or Donald Trump doesn’t like, they will come after them the same way,” Kelly said. “It’s outrageous and it is wrong. There is nothing more un-American than that.”

Here is the video: https://youtube.com/shorts/Fk9Gh3qwW4I?si=QlMPl9Xraza6tytc

I’ll end with one more thing about January 6th. Today on Capitol Hill, Pamela Hempel spoke at a hearing that Democrats held to mark the 5th anniversary of January 6th. She was one of the 1600 insurrectionists who were pardoned by Trump, but she refused the pardon and served time in prison.

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Direct link to above: View this post on Instagram, A post shared by C-SPAN (@cspan)C-SPAN on Instagram: “Pamela Hemphill, a Jan. 6 participant who…

She said at the hearing today:

“Once I got away from the Maga cult and started educating myself about January 6th, I knew what I did was wrong. I am guilty and I own that guilt I had fallen for the president’s lies.”

A remarkable woman of conscience. I wish we had some like her among congressional Republicans, then we could end this madness.

Read more: Seeing Things – January 6th Is Still Happening In Real Time – Liza Donnelly

Continue/Read Original Article Here: January 6th Is Still Happening In Real Time

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Civil Discourse – The Dangerous Revision Of Jan 6 History On The Official WH Website – Joyce Vance

Civil Discourse with Joyce Vance

The Dangerous Revision Of Jan 6 History On The Official WH Website

By Joyce Vance, Jan 06, 2026

As I wrote to you last night, five years on from January 6, Donald Trump is trying to rewrite the history of the insurrection. The White House published a new website today, detailing their version of the timeline of the Jan. 6, 2021, breach of the U.S. Capitol by Trump supporters. He accuses Democrats, pictured in black and white across the top of the page along with Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger, of promoting a “gaslighting narrative” of the day’s events.

The new page starts with the claim that, “President Trump took decisive action to pardon January 6 defendants who were unfairly targeted, overcharged, and used as political examples. They were not protected by the leaders who failed them. They were punished to cover incompetence.” It goes on to assert that his pardons ended “years of harsh solitary confinement, denied due process, and family separation for exercising their First Amendment rights.” The website fails to acknowledge that these criminal defendants were charged by grand juries, convicted at trial, or in many cases, convicted after they pled guilty, and had full appeal rights.

Trump concludes: “The Democrats masterfully reversed reality after January 6, branding peaceful patriotic protesters as ‘insurrectionists’ and framing the event as a violent coup attempt orchestrated by Trump—despite no evidence of armed rebellion or intent to overthrow the government. In truth, it was the Democrats who staged the real insurrection,” which the website says was the certification of the 2020 election that the White House describes as “fraud-ridden” and for allegedly “weaponizing federal agencies to hunt down dissenters.” The courts resoundingly rejected Trump’s claims of a stolen election, with even the Supreme Court ruling against him.

Some of Trump’s peacefully protesting tourists…

The website turns to the blame game—trying to foist off responsibility for January 6 on Nancy Pelosi and Democrats—and offers a timeline that emphasizes Trump’s call for peaceful protest.

A video taken by Pelosi’s daughter is included for the stunning proposition that she accepted blame for the attack on the Capitol. It’s selectively edited video and a debunked claim, indeed, an insincere one for the man who ignored pleas for help from members of his own party and watched the chaos unfold on television when he could have put a stop to it. As Pelosi’s office put it at the time, “Numerous independent fact-checkers have confirmed again and again that Speaker Pelosi did not plan her own assassination on January 6th.” But there it is, on the White House’s official website.

In a speech this morning at the House GOP retreat, held at the newly renamed “Trump Kennedy Center,” Trump, referring to the speech he gave on the Ellipse five years ago, alleged that “the news never reported the words ‘walk or march peacefully and patriotically to the Capitol.’” As far as I recall, those words were widely reported, along with everything else the president said and tweeted at the time, in full context. Trump’s claim that he called for an entirely peaceful protest that day is offset by Jack Smith’s recent testimony that the evidence he compiled established Trump’s complicity. “The evidence here made clear that President Trump was by a large measure the most culpable and most responsible person in this conspiracy. These crimes were committed for his benefit. The attack that happened at the Capitol, part of this case, does not happen without him. The other co-conspirators were doing this for his benefit.”

Read the full transcript of Trump’s speech to the crowd on January 6, 2021, here [https://www.rev.com/transcripts/donald-trump-speech-save-america-rally-transcript-january-6] and make your own assessment. The full context is important, especially with the president installing a sanitized version on the White House website, a slanted version that includes the word he was doubtless encouraged to insert about peacefulness, for the obvious reason that the speech was one that otherwise exhorted the crowd to take action. “We will never give up. We will never concede, it doesn’t happen. You don’t concede when there’s theft involved,” the president told the crowd in the first seconds of his address.

Trump also said:

  • “Our country has had enough. We will not take it anymore and that’s what this is all about. To use a favorite term that all of you people really came up with, we will stop the steal. Today I will lay out just some of the evidence proving that we won this election, and we won it by a landslide. This was not a close election.”
  • “By the way, does anybody believe that Joe had 80 million votes? Does anybody believe that? … There’s never been anything like this. We will not let them silence your voices. We’re not going to let it happen. Not going to let it happen.”
  • [The crowd then breaks in, chanting, “Fight for Trump! Fight for Trump! Fight for Trump!” Trump does not discourage this.]
  • “We’re going walk down to the Capitol, and we’re going to cheer on our brave senators, and congressmen and women … You have to show strength, and you have to be strong … We have come to demand that Congress do the right thing and only count the electors who have been lawfully slated, lawfully slated. I know that everyone here will soon be marching over to the Capitol building to peacefully and patriotically make your voices heard. Today we will see whether Republicans stand strong for integrity of our elections.”
  • “Looking out at all the amazing patriots here today, I have never been more confident in our nation’s future. Well, I have to say we have to be a little bit careful. That’s a nice statement, but we have to be a little careful with that statement. If we allow this group of people to illegally take over our country, because it’s illegal when the votes are illegal, when the way they got there is illegal, when the States that vote are given false and fraudulent information.”
  • “So we’re going to, we’re going to walk down Pennsylvania Avenue, I love Pennsylvania Avenue, and we’re going to the Capitol and we’re going to try and give … The Democrats are hopeless. They’re never voting for anything, not even one vote. But we’re going to try and give our Republicans, the weak ones, because the strong ones don’t need any of our help, we’re going to try and give them the kind of pride and boldness that they need to take back our country.”

This morning, Nancy Pelosi tweeted, “We must speak plainly: January 6th was an attempted coup. It was an effort to nullify millions of lawful votes and subvert the will of the American people. But the attack failed because of the courage of public servants who gave proof through the night that our flag was still there by refusing to bend to pressure, threats, or intimidation. On that day, the Constitution held and we kept the Republic.”

Trump is trying to take it away again, this time with a rewrite of history that is worthy of George Orwell’s 1984. Our job as citizens is clear. We have to remain committed and refuse to let that happen. Facts are powerful. If the truth wasn’t so damaging, Trump wouldn’t be going to this much trouble to rewrite it. That he has public resources and a president’s bully pulpit to do it with is shameful and dangerous.

Last night I wrote to you about the Virginia museum curator, Bill Martin, who insisted on exhibits that put on display a shameful history of teaching fourth graders in the state that slavery was a good time with happy slaves, a gross misrepresentation of reality. Mr. Martin stood for the truth and dislodged and exposed that narrative so it could not be reinstated. We have to do that with Trump’s newest effort to rewrite the history of January 6. Trump may temporarily control government websites and museums, but we control the public narrative on the ground—we are everywhere across the country.

Read more: Civil Discourse – The Dangerous Revision Of Jan 6 History On The Official WH Website – Joyce Vance

Continue/Read Original Article Here: The Dangerous Revision Of Jan 6 History On The Official WH Website

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NPR investigation shows how the government tried to erase information about January 6

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NPR investigation shows how the government tried to erase information about January 6

By Tom Dreisbach, Ayesha Rascoe, Published January 4, 2026 at 7:56 AM EST

AYESHA RASCOE, HOST:

Since President Trump returned to office, his administration has actively tried to erase government information about the January 6, 2021, attack by his supporters on the U.S. Capitol. Now on the fifth anniversary of the attack, NPR is preserving the history of that day. We’ve created a public archive, featuring hundreds of videos submitted as evidence, a timeline of events and our own searchable database of those cases, plus a two-part podcast on that day and the aftermath. NPR investigations correspondent Tom Dreisbach joins us now. Good morning.

AI image by WP AI.

TOM DREISBACH, BYLINE: Good morning, Ayesha.

RASCOE: A lot of people saw footage from January 6 live, or they watched the hearings in Congress. What more was there to uncover about this story?

DREISBACH: Well, part of the reason we’re undertaking this project is ’cause we’re at this really striking moment with the public’s understanding of what actually happened. You know, the government is actively trying to rewrite this history.

Five years ago, right after it happened, there was kind of a consensus. Republicans like Senator Ted Cruz called it an act of domestic terrorism. So did the FBI. Even Trump himself said the rioters, quote, “defiled the seat of democracy” and must, quote, “pay.” Five years later, Trump has now given mass pardons to more than 1,500 January 6 rioters. And those pardons applied to all of the most violent people, people who brutally assaulted police officers. Trump even calls them great patriots. And when he was asked why he included the violent rioters who assaulted cops, he denied that they had committed violence. Here’s what he said last year.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: I pardoned J6 people who were assaulted by our government. That’s who assaulted. And they were treated unfairly. There’s never been a group of people in this country, outside of maybe one instance I can think of, but I won’t get into it, that were treated more horribly than the people of J6. So, no, I didn’t assault. They didn’t assault. They were assaulted.

DREISBACH: In reality, hundreds of defendants did commit violent assaults. But the administration is trying to change reality as people understand it. The Justice Department deleted records of those cases. They scrubbed references to January 6 as a riot. They fired dozens of prosecutors who worked on those cases, and they even hired a former January 6 defendant at the Justice Department, a guy who called cops Nazis and loudly yelled that the rioters should kill the cops. So with all those actions to rewrite this history, we thought it was really important to just ground people in the facts. And with all these 1,500 court cases, we have this massive trove of evidence, thousands of videos that we reviewed that show parts of the riot that most people have never seen.

RASCOE: So what can you tell us about what you found in those records?

DREISBACH: Well, part of it is just busting some of the myths that I hear all the time, even today. One of those most persistent myths is that, oh, it was just a rally and some people got riled up. But the evidence shows people planning for violence, bringing weapons. There’s this video of one rioter. His name was Russell Taylor, and he sent this video to his friend.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

RUSSELL TAYLOR: All right, guys, getting my loadout bag. I got the carbon fiber knuckles, matching hatchets and a little bit of excitement.

(SOUNDBITE OF STUN GUN BUZZING)

DREISBACH: That sound was a stun gun, and Taylor later pleaded guilty to conspiracy to obstruct Congress. Other rioters brought loaded guns – firearms. And then on January 6, when rioters actually did use violence, a lot of them were talking about how it was time for revolution, for civil war, to hang Mike Pence, the then-vice president, and Nancy Pelosi, the speaker of the House at the time. And here’s just a few things that rioters said. These are all taken from the court exhibits.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

UNIDENTIFIED RIOTER #1: If the government is no longer for the people, it is your right, nay, it is your duty to overthrow that government.

UNIDENTIFIED RIOTER #2: That’s right.

UNIDENTIFIED RIOTER #3: They attacked us first, so we stormed the building.

UNIDENTIFIED RIOTER #4: Traitors will be shot. Pence…

UNIDENTIFIED RIOTER #5: We’re coming.

UNIDENTIFIED RIOTER #4: …We’re coming. We…

UNIDENTIFIED RIOTER #5: This is war.

UNIDENTIFIED RIOTER #4: It’s war.

DREISBACH: We should say here that leaders of two extremist groups, the Proud Boys and Oath Keepers, they were convicted of seditious conspiracy against the United States. They received the most serious prison sentences of any defendants, and then Trump came to office and freed them all.

RASCOE: It’s been almost a year since the rioters received pardons. What are they doing now?

DREISBACH: You know, it’s such a big group of people, more than 1,500 defendants, so it really varies. Some are threatening revenge, like the former leader of the Proud Boys. His name is Enrique Tarrio. Some are really just struggling to get by. They can’t find work. One of them told me he had the scarlet eye of insurrection on him. But several have gotten into more legal trouble. One man is facing criminal charges for allegedly threatening to kill Hakeem Jeffries, the House minority leader. Another man has been charged with child molestation, and one of his victims is allegedly an 11-year-old. I asked the Trump administration about those cases, and a White House spokeswoman told me we were spreading, quote, “left-wing talking points” and that the defendants, they said, were aggressively over prosecuted for political purposes.

RASCOE: What about the police who defended the Capitol? People might have heard the statistic that a hundred and forty police officers were injured in the attack. What does the evidence that you looked at show when it comes to the police officers?

DREISBACH: First and foremost is just the brutality of the violence. You know, there’s countless videos and images of officers struggling to breathe from pepper sprays or what’s called bear spray. They’re collapsed on the ground, or they’ve been beaten and they’re trying to wrap up bloodied and broken fingers. Some of the most difficult parts of that day for officers was just not knowing if they would make it home alive. One of the injured officers provided this victim impact statement in one of the court cases, and it’s really stuck with me. He said, quote, “one of the hardest moments of my life was returning home and seeing my wife at 2:30 a.m. weeping in despair and relief, knowing that I made it home.”

Another officer described excruciating back pain that he still has from his injuries, which means he can’t play with his kids anymore. And then there’s so much mental trauma that you hear about from the officers. For this project, I talked with Daniel Hodges. He’s a D.C. police officer. He was repeatedly assaulted through the day on January 6. Rioters punched him, kicked him, tried to gouge out his eyes and crushed him inside a doorway. And I asked him how that experience has changed him.

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Jan. 6 riot ‘does not happen’ without Trump, Jack Smith told Congress – NPR

In this image from video released by the House Judiciary Committee, former special counsel Jack Smith speaks during a deposition Dec. 17, 2025, at the U.S. Capitol in Washington.
House Judiciary Committee / AP

Law
Capitol riot ‘does not happen’ without Trump, Jack Smith told Congress
December 31, 20259:15 PM ET

By The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The Jan. 6., 2021 riot at the U.S. Capitol “does not happen” without Donald Trump, former special counsel Jack Smith told lawmakers earlier this month in characterizing the Republican president as the “most culpable and most responsible person” in the criminal conspiracy to overturn the results of the 2020 election.
Special Counsel Jack Smith, seen here in August 2023, defended his work to House members Wednesday.

Law
Jack Smith defends his prosecutions of Trump in closed-door session in Congress

The Republican-led House Judiciary Committee released on Wednesday a transcript and video of a closed-door interview Smith gave about two investigations of Trump. The document shows how Smith during the course of a daylong deposition repeatedly defended the basis for pursuing indictments against Trump and vigorously rejected Republican suggestions that his investigations were politically motivated.
Special counsel Jack Smith delivers remarks on a recently unsealed indictment against Donald Trump in August 2023 in Washington, D.C.

Law
Special counsel Jack Smith says evidence against Trump was enough to convict him

“The evidence here made clear that President Trump was by a large measure the most culpable and most responsible person in this conspiracy. These crimes were committed for his benefit. The attack that happened at the Capitol, part of this case, does not happen without him. The other co-conspirators were doing this for his benefit,” Smith said, bristling at a question about whether his investigations were meant to prevent Trump from reclaiming the presidency in 2024.

“So in terms of why we would pursue a case against him, I entirely disagree with any characterization that our work was in any way meant to hamper him in the presidential election,” he added.

The Dec. 17 deposition was conducted privately despite Smith’s request to testify publicly. The release of the transcript and video of the interview, so far Smith’s only appearance on Capitol Hill since leaving his special counsel position last January, adds to the public understanding of the decision-making behind two of the most consequential Justice Department investigations in recent history.

Trump was indicted on charges of conspiring to undo the 2020 election he lost to Democrat Joe Biden, and of willfully retaining classified documents at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida. Both cases were abandoned after Trump’s 2024 election win, with Smith citing Justice Department policy against the indictment of a sitting president.

Smith repeatedly made clear his belief that the evidence gathered against Trump was strong enough to sustain a conviction. Part of the strength of the Jan. 6 case, Smith said, was the extent to which it relied on the testimony of Trump allies and supporters who cooperated with the investigation.

“We had an elector in Pennsylvania who is a former congressman, who was going to be an elector for President Trump, who said that what they were trying to do was an attempt to overthrow the government and illegal,” Smith said. “Our case was built on, frankly, Republicans who put their allegiance to the country before the party.”

Editor’s Note: Read the rest of the story, at the below link.

Continue/Read Original Article Here: Jan. 6 riot ‘does not happen’ without Trump, Jack Smith told Congress : NPR

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60 Attorneys on the Year of Chaos Inside Trump’s Justice Department – The New York Times Magazine

“They didn’t want the ethics office calling them up and telling them what to do.”
Joseph Tirrell, former director of the Departmental Ethics Office“If we’re indicting people because the president hates them, that’s counter to the whole point of doing my job.” Mike Romano, former prosecutor in the Public Integrity Section“Our job wasn’t to engage in fact-finding investigations; our job was to find the facts that would fit the narrative.” Dena Robinson, former lawyer in the Civil Rights Division

The Unraveling of the Justice Department, New York Times Magazine

Sixty attorneys describe a year of chaos and suspicion.

By Emily Bazelon and Rachel Poser, Photographs by Stephen Voss, Nov. 16, 2025

President Trump’s second term has brought a period of turmoil and controversy unlike any in the history of the Justice Department. Trump and his appointees have blasted through the walls designed to protect the nation’s most powerful law enforcement agency from political influence; they have directed the course of criminal investigations, openly flouted ethics rules and caused a breakdown of institutional culture. To date, more than 200 career attorneys have been fired, and thousands more have resigned. (The Justice Department says many of them have been replaced.)

What was it like inside this institution as Trump’s officials took control? It’s not an easy question to answer. Justice Department norms dictate that career attorneys, who are generally nonpartisan public servants, rarely speak to the press. And the Trump administration’s attempts to crack down on leaks have made all federal employees fearful of sharing information.

But the exodus of lawyers has created an opportunity to understand what’s happening within the agency. We interviewed more than 60 attorneys who recently resigned or were fired from the Justice Department. Much of what they told us is reported here for the first time.

Beginning with Trump’s first day in office, the lawyers narrated the events that most alarmed them over the next 10 months. They described being asked to drop cases for political reasons, to find evidence for flimsy investigations and to take positions in court they thought had no legitimate basis. They also talked about the work they and their colleagues were told to abandon — investigations of terrorist plots, corruption and white-collar fraud.

Some spoke on the condition of anonymity because they feared retaliation against them or their new employers. We corroborated their accounts with multiple sources, interviewing their colleagues to confirm the details of what they described and reviewing court documents and contemporaneous notes. We also sent a list of questions to the Justice Department and the White House. “This story is a useless collection of recycled, debunked hearsay from disgruntled former employees,” a spokeswoman for the D.O.J. responded in an email. “Targeting the department’s political leadership while ignoring the questionable conduct of former attorneys who do not have the American people’s best interest at heart shows exactly how biased this story is, and further illustrates why Americans are turning away from biased, outdated legacy media platforms.”

Abigail Jackson, a White House spokeswoman, sent this statement: “These are nothing more than pathetic complaints lodged by anti-Trump government workers. President Trump is working on behalf of the millions of Americans who voted for him all across the country, not the D.C. bureaucrats who try to stymie the American people’s agenda at every turn.”

The attorneys who spoke to us for this project, many of whom have spent decades in government service, disagree.

On his first day in office, President Trump made it clear that lawyers loyal to him would lead the Justice Department. One of his personal defense attorneys, Emil Bove, became the temporary No. 2, and Trump nominated another of his lawyers, Todd Blanche, to take the position permanently once the Senate confirmed him.

Trump also undid one of the largest investigations in the Justice Department’s history by pardoning or commuting the sentences of the nearly 1,600 rioters who stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. The group included more than 200 defendants who were convicted of assaulting law enforcement officers.

Prosecutors said they were in disbelief when President Trump pardoned or commuted the sentences of Jan. 6 rioters. Ashley Gilbertson for The New York Times.

Ryan Crosswell, Public Integrity Section, which handles corruption cases: When I saw it was Blanche and Bove, I was actually relieved. OK, it’s gross that they were Trump’s personal attorneys, but before that they were federal prosecutors in New York. They’ve done the job. They know the prosecutors’ code. We’re the only lawyers whose job is not to get the best result for our client. Our job is to get justice. Sometimes that means losing or walking into court and saying we made a mistake.

But then things were 10 times worse than I thought they would be.

Liz Oyer, pardon attorney: We had no knowledge that the Jan. 6 pardons were coming on Day 1. Everybody was concerned that our office was being completely sidelined from the review process.

Gregory Rosen, chief of the breach and assault unit of the Capitol Siege Section, which prosecuted the Jan. 6 rioters: When I was alerted to the pardons, a lot of thoughts ran through my head about how absurd this could get, but first I had to do my job. We had to ask, Did we believe the order was lawful and constitutional?

My team and I determined that it was. The president has the right to pardon people and commute their sentences. So then it was a blitzkrieg of hundreds of cases. We stepped to it.

I was numb. As career prosecutors, we don’t talk about our feelings. We’re not partisans. We’re public servants just doing the job. Early on, we stayed away from using emotional language about our own reactions.

Mike Romano, Jan. 6 prosecutor: Anyone who spent any time working on Jan. 6 cases saw how violent a day that was. I’d spent four years living with that day, the things done to people. It’s incredibly demoralizing to see something you worked on for four years wiped away by a lie — I mean the idea that prosecution of the rioters was a grave national injustice. We had strong evidence against every person we prosecuted. And I knew that if they’re going to wipe all of that away based on a lie, either I’ll be fired as retaliation or pretext or asked to do something unethical. Or both.

Until that point, I’d hoped the second Trump term would be similar to the first one, or similar enough for a while. Then the pardons came down and I knew, in light of that, there is no way I can stay.

Trump appointed Ed Martin, another longtime ally, as interim U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia. Martin had promoted Trump’s baseless claims of election fraud in 2020 and then turned to the cause of defending the Jan. 6 rioters. He had never worked as a prosecutor.

Martin soon fired 15 attorneys in the Capitol Siege Section who prosecuted the Jan. 6 defendants. They joined more than a dozen other prosecutors fired for working under the special counsel, Jack Smith, on the criminal investigations of President Trump. According to the D.O.J.’s new leadership, they could not be trusted to “faithfully implement” the president’s agenda.

Gregory Rosen, Capitol Siege Section: When 15 employees were fired from the Capitol Siege Section, I was the angriest I’ve ever been. Most of them were younger attorneys. I’d hired them. They came from firms, federal and state government, all over. But some naïve part of me thought, Maybe this is the new leadership’s “pound of flesh.”

Prosecutor, Capitol Siege Section: It was inconceivable to me they’d fire people for no reason except they’d worked on cases that were now disfavored. People like me, who are career attorneys, work within a structure. We don’t have much latitude. To be told that you are being punished for your decisions, when you were following guidance created by very talented and skilled prosecutors above you, which judges blessed for the most part — it’s completely bizarre. It flipped the culture of the institution. It’s a culture now of fear. And they are losing people all the time, very good people, who were the future of the department.

 Editor’s Note: Please look at and read the narratives and share the post as you can. This is a case study of how Democracy is lost; how Justice in America is corrupted; by one man, one party, one President who is unfit for office. This is not the people’s DOJ any longer.

Continue/Read Original Article Here: 60 Attorneys on the Year of Chaos Inside Trump’s Justice Department – The New York Times

#2021 #60Attorneys #FiredByDOJ #FiringDOJLawyers #January6AttackOnUSCapitol #January6thAttorneys #Resigned #RiotJanuary6th #TheNewYorkTimes #TheNewYorkTimesMagazine #TrumpPardonsRioters #TrumpSJusticeDepartment #UnravelingDOJ #YearOfChaos

60 Attorneys on the Year of Chaos Inside Trump’s Justice Department

Sixty former staffers describe an environment of suspicion and intimidation within the nation’s most powerful law enforcement agency.

The New York Times

Former Jan. 6 defendant who called cops ‘Nazis’ gets DOJ job : NPR

August 7, 20255:00 AM ET, Heard on All Things Considered

By Tom Dreisbach, 4-Minute Listen Transcript

Police bodycam footage introduced at the trial of Jared Wise showed him berating police officers on Jan. 6, 2021, and yelling “kill ’em” as rioters attacked law enforcement.

Less than five years after urging rioters to “kill” police at the Capitol, a former Jan. 6 defendant is working as a senior adviser for the Department of Justice, which has been dramatically remade under the second Trump administration.

NPR has obtained police bodycam footage from multiple angles of the former defendant and current administration official, Jared Wise, berating officers and calling them “Nazi” and “Gestapo.” NPR located the footage, which has not previously been published, in a review of thousands of court exhibits from Jan. 6 criminal cases, obtained through legal action by a coalition of media organizations. The Department of Justice had introduced the footage as an exhibit in Wise’s trial. NPR also obtained the transcript of Wise’s testimony, in which he acknowledged that he repeatedly yelled “kill ’em” as officers were being attacked and tried to explain his actions. Wise was not convicted of any crimes related to Jan. 6, due to President Trump’s order to end all Capitol riot prosecutions.

A Department of Justice spokesperson said in a statement, “Jared Wise is a valued member of the Justice Department and we appreciate his contributions to our team.”

The videos depict a tense period in the middle of the riot that day.

The Capitol building had been breached two hours earlier, with doors knocked off hinges and windows smashed. The air was thick with pepper spray. The vice president, along with members of Congress, had been forced to evacuate and halt the certification of the 2020 election, as rioters yelled, “give them the rope,” “hang Mike Pence” and “traitors get the guillotine.”

Trump supporters clash with police and security forces as rioters storm the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. Brent Stirton / Getty Images

The Capitol grounds were almost entirely overrun with angry Trump supporters, many of whom had assaulted police with weapons including a bat, a hockey stick, stun guns, metal bars and chemical sprays. Law enforcement officers were bruised, bloodied and, in some cases, temporarily blinded from the attacks, but still trying to hold the line where they could.

At 4:21p.m., Wise stepped up to a police line on the upper west terrace of the building.

Wise had already entered the Capitol through a door that was forced open, exiting about 10 minutes later through a broken window, according to charging documents. He remained on Capitol grounds for hours during the ongoing chaos.

“You guys are disgusting,” Wise told the officers, as captured in the bodycam footage. “I’m former law enforcement. You’re disgusting. You are the Nazi. You are the Gestapo.”

Continue/Read Original Article Here: Former Jan. 6 defendant who called cops ‘Nazis’ gets DOJ job : NPR

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